Parklaner81
Steve Hodge
I would guess that most Labour leave voters would be dis-satisfied with Labour's position on Brexit, as it lands somewhere between soft-Brexit and a 2nd referendum. And most leave voters seem more on the side of a harder-Brexit and most certainly against a 2nd referendum.
Is Brexit the number 1 issue for Labour-leave voters or is it some combination of all the other stuff? I don't know. IMO, if you are a leave voter AND Brexit is most important to you, above all else, then you probably didn't vote for Labour in 2017. (When I say "you" I am speaking generally, I don't mean you personally). My best guess is that if you are a Labour leave voter and the other stuff together is more important to you than Brexit, then you would probably still vote Labour if there was a general election tomorrow, despite preferring Labour did Brexit differently.
That's a reasonable enough response.
The bit where I disagree with you is the bolded bit. Labour overdid most prior expectations in the 2017 general election. My opinion at the time (and still remains, though I'm sure you will disagree) was that they hit something of a ceiling on that day - I think they scooped up pretty much every vote they were ever likely to, in their current form. That doesn't suggest a 'missing' chunk of votes.
(Again) my personal opinion was, and is, that many saw the 2017 GE as a 'free hit' of sorts - I don't think that many people would have thought through the brexit-related implications of their vote, a similar point to that which I think Nayim & GB made earlier. What I'm suggesting therefore is that I think there were in fact a significant number of Labour voters in 2017 for whom brexit was/is their top political priority. What they do next time will be key. If they're anything like me, they might never vote for Labour again as long as they live. If however they are tory-haters first and foremost, then everything I've just said will be academic...
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